Parish Church of St. Peter World War I Memorial - Fleetwood, UK
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member silverquill
N 53° 55.418 W 003° 00.568
30U E 499378 N 5975025
This is the first war memorial in Fleetood, honoring the fallen from World War I. This may have been the first church built in Fleetwood, designed by Decimus Burton who laid out the design for this planned town. The church was dedicated in 1841.
Waymark Code: WMJTMT
Location: North West England, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 12/30/2013
Published By:Groundspeak Charter Member BruceS
Views: 3



TO THE GLORY OF GOD
AND IN GRATEFUL MEMORY OF
THE CHURCHMEN OF FLEETWOOD
WHO GAVE THEIR LIVES
FOR THEIR COUNTRY
1941 - 1919
This is said to be the first war memorial erected in the town of Fleetwood. (Also in 1919 the Fleetwood Memorial Clock was given in honor of the veterans of World War I and mounted in the Mount Pavilion.) This memorial is a bronze cross with two kneeling angels on the base, mounted on circular base. The names of the fallen are inscribed on the four faces of the bronze base, with a few additional names on a metal plate on the circular base. The monument is placed at the side of the church.

The following names are inscribed on the bronze base of the memorial:

BURGOYNE ANDERSON
WALTER G. ANDERTON
HENRY A. AUSTIN
SAMUEL E. BAILEY
THOMAS BAILEY
THOMAS F. BAMEER
THOMAS BARTON
GEORGE BEACHER
THOMAS BEE. M. M.
SAMUEL E. BELL
CLIFFORD BLACKBURNE
HARRY T. BLAIR
ANTHONY BOND
SEPTIMUS H. BOND
EDWARD BROWN
JAMES BROWN
JOHN BUNNELL
WILLIAM CARTER
HARRY CAVENDER
WILLIAM CHARNLEY
OSCAR W. CHRISTY
DANIEL G. COLLINSON
JOSEPH COLLINSON
HENRY COWELL
HARRY H. CROASDALE
JOHN N. W. CROFT
ALFRED DENNY
ALEXANDER DICKINSON
JOHN J. DICKINSON
ARTHUR P. DOUBLE
HARRY DOUBLE
WILLIAM H. EAVES
JAMES FLETCHER
JAMES H. FORREST
JAMES FOSTER
WILLIAM R. FOX
CUTHBERT V. GAULTER
ROBERT GREEN
NEIL GREGORY
DAVID V. GROVE
ROBERT HALL
WILLIAM H. HALL
WILLIAM HESKETH
JOSEPH HOLDEN
GEORGE HOWARTH
CYRIL C. HUMPHREYS
WILLIAM M. JOHNSON
ALBERT V. JONES
JOHN H. KEAN
WILLIAM J. KENT
NELSON V. LARGE
ARTHUR LEA
JOSEPH LEADBETTER
THOMAS LEADBETTER
AMBROSE LYNCH
JOSEPH MARSDEN
HARWOOD MAULKINSON
ALBERT G. MAYSON
ROBERT D. McNICOL
HENRY MEADOWS
HENRY MINNS
WILLIAM MOSS
HARRY MYERSCOUGH
MILES NEWBY
FRANK OSWALD
WILLIAM POOLE
JOHN A. S. PORTER
THOMAS PORTER
WALTER D. PORTER
FRED RADBURN
JOHN R. RAILTON
THOMAS H. RAWCLIFFE
EDWARD P. RIMMER
PETER RIMMER
THOMAS M. RIMMER
ROBERT ROBINSON
THOMAS ROSE
RICHARD ROSKELL
EDWARD SALTHOUSE
HALL S. SALTHOUSE
SHEARD SALTHOUSE
PETER SCOTT
RICHARD SHARPLES
THOMAS SHARPLES
RICHARD R. SNAPE
JOSEPH SQUIRE
ROBERT STEEN
WILLIAM STRICKLAND
HAROLD SUTCLIFFE
THOMAS SWAN
FREDERICK A. WALLINGER
JOHN WALSH
STANLEY WARWICK
THOMAS WHALLEY
GEORGE H. WHITESIDE
JOHN WILSON
JOHN WILSON
RICHARD WILSON
JOHN WRIGHT
FREDERICK DUTTON

The following names are inscribed on the circular mounting of the memorial:

HERBERT W. BEARDOE
JOHN BENNETT
WILLIAM BOND
JAMES POWELL
WILLIAM WELSEY
CHARLES SLAPP
ROBERT SPENCER
JAMES WESTHEAD
WILLIAM HARGRAVES
DAVID LONGWORTH
JOHN W. MATTHEWS
SAMUEL CAIRNS
WILLIAM I. ISHER M. M.
THOMAS B. COWPE
THOMAS FIELD
JAMES DOVE




St. Peter's is one of the landmark buildings in Fleetwood, a seaside town that was once the third largest fishing port in England. When Peter Hesketh-Fleetwood hired Decimus Burton to undertake the master plan for a new town at the mouth of the River Wyre in 1836, this church took a central place and construction was begun in 1839, and Peter Hesketh-Fleetwood himself laid the foundation stone.



THE PARISH CHURCH OF ST PETER

Designed by Decimus Burton and first opened in 1841, St. Peter's
Anglican Church was enlarged in 1860 and again by Messrs. Paley
and Austin Lancaster in 1883. The church was built with a spire
but this was removed in about 1904 when it became unsafe.

In the church grounds stands the town's original War Memorial
commemorating the dead of the First World War.

The church continues to be used as a place of worship today.

Wyre Borough Council




In 1978 it received the Grade II designation on the English Heritage Listed Buildings. The following is an excerpt from the official listing:

GV II Parish church of 1839-41 by D. Burton, extended in 1883 by Paley & Austin.

MATERIALS: Coursed and dressed sandstone, rock-faced to nave and tower, with freestone dressings, slate roofs.

PLAN: Nave with west tower, transepts, chancel with separately roofed north organ chamber and south chapel.

EXTERIOR: The broad nave and the tower are in the simple Gothic style of the early C19. The 2-stage squat tower (designed to carry a spire that has been removed) has diagonal buttresses in the lower stage with gabled offsets, polygonal buttresses in the upper stage carried up as corner polygonal turrets in the corbelled and embattled crown. Entrances are in north and south walls. The west window is triple pointed lights. In the narrower bell stage are paired openings with louvres and linked hood moulds. The buttressed nave is divided into 5 narrow bays by gabled buttresses, built against pilaster strips, and corbel table. It has tall pointed windows and sill band. The eastern end is in a more developed Early-English style, with steeper roofs than the earlier work. Transepts have triple stepped windows with shafts (the north window blocked) and shallow lean-to west porches. East windows are varied although they are all of the same date. The chancel east window is 5 lights, the central taller, and with tracery circles above the outer pairs of main lights. In the south chapel the east wall has 4 blind arches on shafts, 2 enclosing small quatrefoil windows, and with 4 lights to the south window. The organ chamber has an east window of 2 lights with hood mould.

HISTORY: Built in 1839-41 by Decimus Burton as an integral component of the new town of Fleetwood, laid out by Burton for Sir Peter Hesketh-Fleetwood (1836-43). Burton (1800-81) was the son of a London builder, began his career in 1821 and retired in 1869. His architecture was essentially undogmatic and scenic, which is not to say that it could not be tough-minded when necessary. He is particularly associated with urban planning, having assisted his father in the design of terraces at Regent's Park and at St Leonards, East Sussex. His major works in this genre is the Calverley Estate in Tunbridge Wells (1828 onwards). Although best known for work in Greek Revival style, all his small number of churches are in plan gothic styles, of which St Peter's is not unrepresentative. At Fleetwood, a scheme only partly completed, he also designed the North Euston Hotel, Queen's terrace, the Custom House and two lighthouses. The east end of the church was extended in 1883 by Paley and Austin, architects of Lancaster, who added the present transepts, chancel, vestry and chapel. The spire was removed in 1904.



The organ, of 1924, is by James Binns of Leeds and incorporates the Binns patent tubular pneumatic action (From: English Heritage Listed Buildings

The Te Deum east and other early C20 windows are by Ward & Hughes, and the south transept window of St Peter is by R.B. Edmundson & Son (1860) From: English Heritage Listed Buildings

Date the Monument or Memorial was built or dedicated: 01/01/1919

Private or Public Monument?: Private

Name of the Private Organization or Government Entity that built this Monument: Parish Church of St. Peter

Geographic Region where the Monument is located: Europe

Physical Address of Monument:
Lord St.
Fleetwood, Lancashire United Kingdom


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